Abstract
Writing the recent history of mental health services
requires a conscious departure from the historiographical tropes of
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries which have emphasised the
experience of those identified (and legally defined) as lunatics and
the social, cultural, political, medical and institutional context of their
treatment. A historical narrative structured around rights (to health and
liberty) is now complicated by the rise of new organising categories such
as 'costs', 'risks', 'needs' and 'values'. This paper, drawing on insights
from a series of witness seminars attended by historians, clinicians
and policymakers, proposes a programme of research to place modern
mental health services in England and Wales in a richer historical
context. Historians should recognise the fragmentation of the concepts
of mental illness and mental health need, acknowledge the relationship
between critiques of psychiatry and developments in other intellectual
spheres, place the experience of the service user in the context of
wider socio-economic and political change, understand the impacts
of the social perception of 'risk' and of moral panic on mental health
policy, relate the politics of mental health policy and resources to the
general determinants of institutional change in British central and local
government, and explore the sociological and institutional complexity of
the evolving mental health professions and their relationships with each
other and with their clients. While this is no small challenge, it is perhaps
the only way to avoid the perpetuation of 'single-issue mythologies' in
describing and accounting for change.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 599-624 |
| Journal | Medical History |
| Volume | 59 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Oct 2015 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Note: This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust [grant number 093390Z/10/Z].Keywords
- Psychiatry, neuroscience and clinical psychology